the dominant trait
A dominant trait masks another form of a trait, also known as the recessive trait.
one of his parents must have the red-hair allele, but they both have brown hair so they are both hetereozygous with the dominant brown allele. Patrick's red hair is homozygous recessive
Yes, brown in general is a very common hair color because it is a dominant genetic trait. This means if one parent has it, the child almost indefinately will also.
black color in hair is a dominant trait. same goes for brown eyes. blonde hair a blue eyes color is the opposite.
i think you mean dominent, if not then i don't know. but dominent is used when studying genes or traits. it means that one trait has a higher chance of being shown. dominent traits are easy to find you just look at the person. like say your mother had brown hair and your father had blonde.you and your brother both had brown hair. that would mean that brown was mos likely dominent and blonde was recessive. most likely your children would have brown hair depending on who you married, but being that blonde was recessive or (hidden) then theres chance that they or your third sibling could have blonde hair.
A dominant trait overpowers a recessive trait. If your dad has brown hair and your mom has orange hair, you are more likely to get your dad's brown hair because it is the dominant trait.
No, you carry the dominant trait of Black hair.
the dominant trait
brown eyes are dominant and are the most common eye colour half of the world has them population have them including me
75% chance
Alzaymrs is ottosomal dominent
The best way to understand this is with examples. Hair color is a trait. Brown, black, red, blond are characteristics of the hair color trait. Hair type is a trait. Curly or straight are characteristics of the trait of hair type. Body size is a trait. Tall or short are characteristics of the trait of body size.
It's possible that the child will have black, brown or red hair.
A dominant trait masks another form of a trait, also known as the recessive trait.
I think you've mis-asked this question, since you've used "brown hair" in both portions of the question. If you mean, if one person has brown hair and another has blond hair, will their children have blond or brown hair? The answer is it's highly likely that the children will have brown hair - brown hair is a dominant gene - but there is a possibility that the child will have blond hair, since the way the genes combine is not always the same. If it were always predictable, all children from the same parents would be the same, like clones of each other; and they're not.
one of his parents must have the red-hair allele, but they both have brown hair so they are both hetereozygous with the dominant brown allele. Patrick's red hair is homozygous recessive